|
WSWS
: News &
Analysis : Middle
East
Israel: General strike over unpaid salaries
By Brian Smith
2 October 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Israel is facing a wave of social unrest and industrial action,
in opposition to the sweeping attacks on living standards by the
Likud government of Ariel Sharon.
On September 21, the Israeli General Federation of Labour (Histadrut)
held a general strike in protest against the ongoing failure of
the government to pay wages to local authorities employees.
Some 400,000 public sector workers across 265 municipalities came
out, bringing the state to a halt. Flights, seaports, railways,
post offices, banks and the stock exchange were all shut down,
whilst hospitals and the fire service operated on an emergency
footing. Schools, day-care centres, kindergartens, and universities
were also affected.
The strike also included the Israeli Electrical Corporation,
Mekorot National Water Company, oil refineries, public works departments,
and the Eilat-Ashkelon Pipeline Company. Border crossings were
closed, and all government offices including civilian employees
in the Israeli Defence Force and at the Negev Nuclear Research
Plant were on strike.
Calling the strike was forced upon Histadrut by the depth of
opposition and anger amongst workers. Histadruts chief and
Member of the Knesset Amir Peretz said, I used to believe
in the prime minister, the Knesset, and the courts, yet when I
realised there are Israelis hungry for bread, I decided to act.
No one, not even the Prime Minister, has the right to
set any conditions whatsoever for payment of many months of salaries
owed to the workers, Peretz noted. The government
is turning wages into charity. Wages are not a favour, they are
a legal obligation. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, Minister of Finance
Benjamin Netanyahu, and Minister of Internal Affairs Avraham Poraz
are not enforcing the law. Theyre turning Israel into a
third world country.
The strike was called following a breakdown in negotiations
between the Histadrut and the government regarding the payment
of salaries to large sections of workers that have remained unpaid
for months and in some cases years. The government wishes to link
any payment to the reform of the municipalities, insisting that
it will only give the money for salaries to those municipalities
that agree to impose economic recovery plans, a euphemism
for cuts, dismissals and early retirements.
Histadrut Trade Union division head Shlomo Shani left open
a possible deal when he said, The other side accuses us
of refusing to sign recovery plans, but our principle is clear:
those who work should be paid, and only afterwards can we talk
about recovery plans.
The strike ended after just one day when the National Labour
Courts Steve Adler ordered Histadrut to instruct its members
to return to work. Adler also ordered the government to pay back-wages
to 96 percent of the 100,000-plus municipal workers by September
29, which is the eve of the religious festival of Sukkot. The
remaining 4 percent, which represent workers in local authorities
that are refusing to present recovery plans, are to be paid within
40 days. This 4 percent represents 29 authorities (including 26
in the Arab sector), and the Interior Minister is to appoint a
management committee to run these authorities.
The Ministry of Finance has now transferred NIS 54 million
to the Ministry of the Interior for the payment of wages, but
at least 43 percent of workers will not receive their back-pay
by the Sukkot holidays despite the court ruling, according to
Haaretz.
Economists estimate that the strike cost the state around $220
million.
The government fears that labour unrest will cause a flight
of future investors and entrepreneurs from an economy already
reeling from the virtual collapse of its much-heralded IT sector.
This, a collapse in tourism and the ongoing cost of the intifada
have provoked a major economic and social crisis.
There was an increase in jobseekers/unemployed in August to
an all-time high of 243,5173.5 percent up on July and 9
percent on the previous August. In Arab communities, unemployment
is 21 percent, and 16 percent in development towns. All municipalities
in the south have unemployment levels higher than 10 percent,
with Yeruham leading Jewish communities at 14.3 percent.
There are ongoing negotiations between Histadrut and the government,
with Histadrut making largely cosmetic demands for shared
sacrificecurbing excessive salaries of senior officials,
pay cuts to affect all including senior officials. If negotiations
are not completed by October 14, the matter is to be referred
to the National Labour Court.
Histadruts cooperation with the government is being sought
by threatening its role as an overseer of part of what remains
of the Israeli welfare state. On assuming office, Finance Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu passed legislation without consultation that
called for the nationalisation of the Histadruts pension
funds. Within the last week, the Finance Ministry has attempted
to block Histadruts pension arrangements with both the Clal
and Harel Insurance agencies, as a way of applying pressure to
the federation.
Netanyahu also called for the raising of the age of retirement
for both men and women (to 67 and 64, respectively), and this
took effect last April. This measure and reform of the ports were
both forced through without consultation or debate, with the latter
leading to a long and bitter strike.
The reform of the municipalities, which was included in Netanyahus
March 2004 budget, was also forced through. NIS 1.5 billion was
cut from municipal budgets despite warnings that this would lead
to the collapse of the municipal system. Netanyahu has said of
the recent standoff that he is willing to fire 200 deputy
mayors if that is what is needed to stop the waste.
If Histadrut fails to police the attacks on its members, then
Netanyahu and a supportive right-wing media are threatening legal
curbs. The Jerusalem Post cites the example of New York
City in the 1970s as similarly in need of reform, when President
Gerald Ford famously told New York City to Drop Deadi.e.,
that it would not be bailed out by central government.
Municipalities in the US are now scrutinised by Bond Rating Agencies
that decide whether a municipality may borrow, based on its fiscal
prudence.
Steven Plaut in Arutz Sheva proclaimed, Many of
the very worst of the deficit-mongers have been the Arab towns,
which tend to grant exemption to the paying of local property
taxes to nearly everyone capable of breathing twice in a row.
He goes on to say that there are plenty of deficit-mongers
amongst Jewish municipalities, but that Arab towns are over-funded
(emphasis in original).
Netanyahu, on the other hand, reserved his main threats for
the trade unions. He told the Haaretz newspaper that
the purpose of his forthcoming trip to an International Monetary
Fund meeting in Washington on October 3 was to tell the
worlds finance ministers that Israel has a rising economy
and its worthwhile for them to do business with us.
He declared his intention to end what Haaretz
summarised as an economy based on excessive welfare handouts
that relied on the idea that someone else will pay.
In the past, Israel was a bad country for
businesswith its Histadrut, taxes, welfareand things
could not go on this way... If there is someone trying to delay
changing the economy today, thats the Histadrut. It doesnt
hesitate to dismiss its own staff, but its quick to fire
off a television campaign to raise the minimum wage. We are talking
about a kiss of death for the economy. You cannot compete when
the minimum wage is rising.
Noting that the last strike proved that the Histadrut had the
power to shut the economy down, he threatened, This has
to be changed by law. Otherwise, this isnt a state. Its
madness. A group of gangsters and hypocrites is oppressing workers
everywhere, preventing a recovery program that would save the
workers, shutting down the economy and sending factories fleeing,
causing the most strikes in the world, while the entire rest of
the world is streamlining and competing, and theres a free
flow of products and goods. We cant continue this way.
Netanyahu asked how he related his views to the hunger
that we see all around us. He replied with contempt, Its
20-30 percent true, but 70-80 percent a lie by people who dont
want to go to work.
See Also:
Sharon threatens to kill Arafat
[18 September 2004]
Israel targets Palestinians,
threatens Syria
[11 September 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |